Will
fines be imposed for public nudity?
Different
versions of the music clip 'Anh khong doi qua' (I don't want my gifts back),
in which sexy girls strip off their clothes on the street
As Decree 167/2013, which takes effect on Dec 28, doesn’t
stipulate fines for public nudity, many wonder if violators will get off
without punishment.
This question has been raised after several youths made and
released versions of the music clip “Anh khong doi qua” (I don’t want my
gifts back), and authorities are beginning to look into the cases. In each of
the clips, a sexy young girl walks down the street, taking off her
accessories one by one until she is almost naked, wearing only a pair of
underwear.
Around eight such clips were made in provinces including
Hanoi, Nam Dinh, Nghe An, Ba Ria Vung Tau, and Khanh Hoa, and have recently
gone viral on the Internet. A junior version made in Buon Ma Thuot in Dac Lac
province in which a little girl strips off her clothes on the street was also
released.
The clips were inspired by a video a girl in
On December 17, the Cai Rang district police in southern Can
Tho City reported that they will fine the seven young girls who made the
clips for disrupting a civilized lifestyle, and will notify their families
and local officials of the violations to prevent them from committing similar
offenses in the future.
However, the fines have yet to be imposed.
Binh Thuan province’s People’s Committee also recently
instructed its Department of Culture, Sports, and Tourism to look into two
such clips made in Phan Thiet to see if the participants have infringed on
the law.
To fine or not to fine?
According to Article 10 in Decree 73/2010, which stipulates
penalties of administrative violations on social security and order, the fine
for nudity in public places varies from VND60,000 to 100,000 (up to US$5).
However, the term specifies that fines should only be imposed
when one is nude in crowded places where people gather for a particular
purpose, at cultural or religious edifices, or at state agencies. As the
clips were filmed on empty streets, the youths can’t be fined. Even if the
clips were filmed on crowded streets, they could avoid being fined, as
streets don’t fit the specifications of the term.
The above-mentioned Decree 73/2010 will become invalid
tomorrow, Dec 28. Meanwhile, the superseding Decree 167/2013, which will take
effect tomorrow, excludes altogether the term on fines for public nudity.
However, in an interview with Thanh Nien newspaper on Dec 18,
Pham Xuan Phuc of the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism, said that the
case should be handled based on Decree 75/2010, which stipulates penalties on
administrative violations in cultural and performance activities.
He elaborated that although the youths filmed the clips
unprofessionally, they were still engaging in a performance and thus can be
fined for wearing culturally inappropriate costumes. The fine for the offence
varies from VND2 million to 5 million (up to US$236).
The lingering question is whether people will be fined if they
strip or display nudity on the street not for performing purposes. Some men
in
TUOITRENEWS
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Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 12, 2013
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